Spanish English Dictionary

español - English

pelearse in English:

1. brawl brawl


There were a lot of drunk people in town last night, and some of them got involved in a brawl outside the pub.
The young men had nothing better to do than brawl in the streets.

2. fall out fall out


Let's not fall out over such an unimportant issue.
He noticed that his hair started to fall out.
fall out of love
Elizabeth, I really don´t want fall out with you about over this!
John and Marry used to fall out a lot and they eventually split up.
You could fall out of a gondola or off a bridge.
My wallet had to fall out of bag at the airport

English word "pelearse"(fall out) occurs in sets:

Book phrasal verb summary

3. fight fight


It's not the size of the dog in the fight, it's the size of the fight in the dog.
The fight for civil rights in the United States started in 1954, when the government said school had to be open to everyone.
The fight continues!
We must stop urban sprawl and fight against physical segregation while still guaranteeing the right to housing.
How characteristically quirky of him to give you both a dozen roses and a dozen camellias, and have them fight to the death!
Oh my. However much it's just a P.E. class; if you don't face it in real earnest, then when it comes to a real fight it won't do you any good.
In a fight against speculators who are dumping the U.S. currency, central banks of major countries have carried out massive concerted interventions in the market.
Pole and Hungarian - two good friends, joint fight and drinking are their ends.
It is necessary to fight AIDS with whatever weapons are at hand.
The movie "Fight Club" has a surprise ending.
The precious results of democracy are the apple of the people's eye and the people will fight to maintain these ideals.
The anti-rational, anti-justice and anti-humane Christian malignancy is rearing its head yet again as it leads the fight against homosexuality on behalf of the divine trinity of unreason, injustice and hate.
In the fight to abolish slavery Lincoln knew that he occupied the moral high ground.
When two armies oppose one another, those who can fight should fight, those who can't fight should guard, those who can't guard should flee, those who can't flee should surrender, and those who can't surrender should die.

English word "pelearse"(fight) occurs in sets:

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